TY - CHAP
T1 - Improving Crop Estimates by Integrating Multiple Data Sources
AU - COMMITTEE ON NATIONAL STATISTICS
AU - PANEL ON METHODS FOR INTEGRATING MULTIPLE DATA SOURCES TO IMPROVE CROP ESTIMATES
AU - Bock, Mary Ellen
AU - Gershunskaya, Julie
AU - Ghosh, Malay
AU - Goodchild, Michael
AU - Hart, Chad
AU - Massa, Olga Isengildina
AU - Offutt, Susan
AU - Stokes, S. Lynne
AU - Wakefield, Jon
AU - Young, Robert
AU - Kirkendall, Nancy J.
AU - Harris-Kojetin, Brian
AU - Citro, Constance F.
AU - White, Glenn D.
AU - Kasper, Mary Ann
AU - Groves, Robert M.
AU - Blau, Francine
AU - Case, Anne C.
AU - Chernew, Michael E.
AU - Currie, Janet
AU - Dillman, Donald A.
AU - Gatsonis, Constantine
AU - House, James S.
AU - Mesenbourg, Thomas L.
AU - Nusser, Sarah M.
AU - O’Muircheartaigh, Colm
AU - Reiter, Jerome P.
AU - Rigobon, Roberto
AU - Selzter, Judith A.
AU - Shortliffe, Edward H.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright 2017 by the National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - The National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) is the primary statistical data collection agency within the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). NASS conducts hundreds of surveys each year and prepares reports covering virtually every aspect of U.S. agriculture. Among the small-area estimates produced by NASS are county-level estimates for crops (planted acres, harvested acres, production, and yield by commodity) and for cash rental rates for irrigated cropland, nonirrigated cropland, and permanent pastureland. Key users of these county-level estimates include USDA's Farm Services Agency (FSA) and Risk Management Agency (RMA), which use the estimates as part of their processes for distributing farm subsidies and providing farm insurance, respectively. Improving Crop Estimates by Integrating Multiple Data Sources assesses county-level crop and cash rents estimates, and offers recommendations on methods for integrating data sources to provide more precise county-level estimates of acreage and yield for major crops and of cash rents by land use. This report considers technical issues involved in using the available data sources, such as methods for integrating the data, the assumptions underpinning the use of each source, the robustness of the resulting estimates, and the properties of desirable estimates of uncertainty.
AB - The National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) is the primary statistical data collection agency within the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). NASS conducts hundreds of surveys each year and prepares reports covering virtually every aspect of U.S. agriculture. Among the small-area estimates produced by NASS are county-level estimates for crops (planted acres, harvested acres, production, and yield by commodity) and for cash rental rates for irrigated cropland, nonirrigated cropland, and permanent pastureland. Key users of these county-level estimates include USDA's Farm Services Agency (FSA) and Risk Management Agency (RMA), which use the estimates as part of their processes for distributing farm subsidies and providing farm insurance, respectively. Improving Crop Estimates by Integrating Multiple Data Sources assesses county-level crop and cash rents estimates, and offers recommendations on methods for integrating data sources to provide more precise county-level estimates of acreage and yield for major crops and of cash rents by land use. This report considers technical issues involved in using the available data sources, such as methods for integrating the data, the assumptions underpinning the use of each source, the robustness of the resulting estimates, and the properties of desirable estimates of uncertainty.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105031178016
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105031178016#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.17226/24892
DO - 10.17226/24892
M3 - Chapter
AN - SCOPUS:105031178016
SN - 030946529X
SN - 9780309465298
SP - 1
EP - 110
BT - Coresource 4
PB - National Academies Press
ER -